Meteorite from Mercury? 16
texchanchan writes "The BBC reports that a chunk of rock, clearly from space, might have originated on Mercury. Analysis of its chemical makeup leads to this tentative conclusion. Specifically, it seems to have originated on something with 'a core of molten iron [and] an outer covering of silicon and aluminium that formed a basaltic crust.' This meteorite classification site sticks to the earlier theory that NWA 011 is from a Vesta-like source."
Few other likely candidates than Mercury. (Score:1)
Am I missing something??? (Score:2, Interesting)
However, in the article there is no claim to it coming from Mercury (rather it is a new type of basalt). Am I missing somebody else's intrepetation of the data, or is this media spin?
Re:Am I missing something??? Nope...regrettably (Score:2)
Re:Am I missing something??? Nope...regrettably (Score:3, Insightful)
So people're inferring that it's from Mercury through a process of elimination. Seems reasonable to me.
Re:Am I missing something??? Nope...regrettably (Score:2)
I find it easier to believe than to believe that a rock was blasted off of Mercury and then somehow made it to Earth's orbit.
If you really want to know where it came from, we'll need a close look at Mercury. Last I heard, the European Space Agency's Mercury mission included a lander, so we might be in luck.
Re:Am I missing something??? Nope...regrettably (Score:2)
The very nature of the asteroid belt is such that huge asteroids are unlikely (note: IANAA). Jupiter's gravitational influence would stop bodies of sufficient size from forming; loose agglomerations are possible - even likely - but these wouldn't, TTBOMK, be sufficiently packed for their own gravity to allow the iron to sink into the centre.
Re:Am I missing something??? Nope...regrettably (Score:2)
Note: I am an astronomer
Re:Am I missing something??? Nope...regrettably (Score:1)
Now all I need to do is try to be happy that I've been corrected rather than disgruntled at having my spurious pontification shown to be in error in front of millions of erudite personages.
No, wait... only
It came from Mercury....? (Score:1)
Doesn't anyone think these claims are bogus? (Score:2, Insightful)
All this stuff seems to be based on what Frazer called "the magical laws of similarity and contagion" rather than real science. I tried to link Frazer's magnum opus The Golden Bough here but
It's a logical fallacy to assume that object A was once a part of object B simply because they share the same composition; in fact it's a bad idea to blindly assume object A came from B even if A is identical to an object you know came from object B!
Pseudo-scientific psychobabble by fuzzy thinkers in search of grant money? Or just bad reporting?
Re:Doesn't anyone think these claims are bogus? (Score:1)
Re:Doesn't anyone think these claims are bogus? (Score:2)
You see, you're not committing the error I'm harping on. You described a hypothesis as likely, which is appropriate given your understanding of the data. You haven't stated a tentative hypothesis as though it were a known fact, and you've given independently verifiable background information to support your theories.
A creationist (one of those people who thinks G-d likes to torment his creations by playing tricks on them) would say that the rock was composed as it is in order to test the faithful. This worldview is as internally consistent as your own, and it's even harder to refute.
A person who believes in an unbounded universe could point out, postulating that infinity is real and not a mathematical conceit, that the rock could've come from a mercury-like planet in another galaxy, and the circumstances of it's transit here caused it to arrive at a time and place consistent with rocks being ejected from Mercury. Again, this is a difficult argument to comprehensively refute, since the concept of infinity expressed as a physical construct requires all things to exist.
But regardless of which religion or philosophy one chooses, stating that it's from Mercury because Mercury is (astronomically speaking) close by and rocks on mercury are identical in composition is simply invoking the time-worn laws of similarity and contagion - the same laws behind the construction of voodoo dolls.
Anyone really capable of deeper comprehension than these surface issues will use less absolute terms - as you did, in your post. Tying the origin of rock samples to certain planets on the basis of isotope composition is logically weak, and thus should always be stated equivocally.
comments from the peanut gallery (Score:1)
I just want to live up to your so-elegantly stated expectations... your mastery of the language is impressive!